National Report Reveals Racial Differences Regarding Future of Work, Finds Significant Majority of Americans - Including 85 Percent of African Americans - Support Free College
New Survey by America's Black Think Tank Provides Extensive Look at How Americans of Color View the Future of Work
Jul 24, 2019, 00:00 ET
WASHINGTON, July 24, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -- A new nationwide survey on race and the future of work commissioned by the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies finds a significant majority of Americans support free college or training, with African Americans ranking highest (85 percent) of any racial group. The results – released in tandem with the National Urban League Conference in Indianapolis – also reveal significant differences between how communities of color view workforce issues nationally.
"Our report offers the most in-depth view to date of how communities of color perceive the future of work, providing insights for lawmakers to address long-term challenges and ensure Americans from all backgrounds are prepared to compete in a rapidly evolving economy," said Spencer Overton, President of the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies and tenured Professor of Law at George Washington University.
The report – one of six the Joint Center will release this year regarding race and the future of work – finds communities of color have significant interest in education and training as policymakers, employers, and education leaders grapple with how to prepare the workforce for a changing economy.
For example:
- African Americans, Latinos, and Asian Americans are all more likely than Whites to pursue higher education at a 4-year, community or online institution when needing to gain new skills for their current or future job.
- Nearly a third of Latinos believe vocational training options are most impactful for preparing children for the future of work—more than any other racial group.
- Asian Americans (41 percent) are 70 percent more likely than African Americans (24 percent) to believe that technology has provided them more opportunities in the workplace.
- While survey respondents of all racial backgrounds report that technology has created more job opportunities and efficiencies than it has eliminated, African Americans are the least likely to believe this to be true.
"In 20 to 30 years, people of color will constitute over half of all Americans," said Overton. "Over that same period, a substantial majority of jobs will require some form of education or training beyond what's offered in high school. Yet, most discussions of the future of work ignore the disproportionate effects it will have on communities of color. If we're to meaningfully address rather than simply replicate the historical inequities that continue to burden communities of color, we need policymakers, employers, and education providers working in unison to ensure workers of color have meaningful opportunities to gain the skills required to overcome the seismic labor market challenges on the horizon."
Other key findings include:
- A majority of Americans support guaranteed jobs as a way to address job displacement, with African Americans expressing the most support at 75 percent.
- African Americans (25 percent), Latinos (23 percent), and Asian Americans (24 percent) are all more likely than White Americans (16 percent) to believe teaching computer programming is most impactful method to prepare children for the future of work.
- A quarter of Latino workers have reported moving from salaried to hourly work at their current place of employment—over twice the rate of White workers.
- Regardless of race, at least 7 out of 10 Americans are interested in participating in employer-based on-the-job training if offered by their employer, and even more are interested in paid training.
- Cost is a major barrier to obtaining additional training for approximately half of Americans, regardless of race.
The report was authored by Joint Center Director of Survey Research Ismail White, Ph. D and Joint Center Workforce Policy Director Harin Contractor. The Joint Center designed the survey instrument and commissioned the nationally-representative survey of 1115 Whites and nationally representative oversamples of 667 African Americans, 619 Latinos, and 611 Asian Americans to better understand how communities of color perceive the effects of rapid technological and economic changes on the future of work. The margin of error fell within +/– 5 percentage points, and the survey responses were re-weighted to a 2000-person sample with 500 interviewees from each racial group. Nielsen Scarborough, an independent, U.S.-based market research company, collected the data between September 1 and September 28, 2018. The report was made possible by the US 2050 project, supported by the Peter G. Peterson Foundation and the Ford Foundation. Lumina Foundation provided communications support for the survey's release.
The Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, founded in 1970 as America's Black think tank, is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization based in Washington, DC. The Joint Center's mission is to inform and illuminate the nation's major public policy debates through research, analysis, and information dissemination in order to improve the socioeconomic status of Black communities in the United States; expand their effective participation in the political and public policy arenas; and promote communication and relationships across racial and ethnic lines to strengthen the nation's pluralistic society. We tailor our solutions to be accessible, and we collaborate with those who have shared interests to maximize impact.
SOURCE Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies
